It really shines in that you don’t need a lot of technical expertise to be able to create slick animations.

Adding & Creating Page Elements

You can drag-and-drop any PNG, GIF or JPEG images (or press Ctrl + Shift + I to insert images) and MP3 or WAV sounds or voice recordings (or head to Insert > Page sound or SWF overlay) onto the Powerbullet work area, which consists of a page (similar to a Powerpoint slide).

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Your product can have several pages, which enables you to create continuous animations if you so choose. If you do include more than one page, you have the options to add arrows between pages that you can click on to transition to the next page, or you can also choose to automatically go on to the following page.

To create a background with a nice gradient, follow the steps in this tutorial by YouTube tech extraordinaire, Tinkernut:

Animating Page Elements

Right-click on any image or text you’ve added to your page and select Item effects (alternatively, press Ctrl +\ or select an element, head to Selection > Animation and effects).

There’s more than 20 different effects that you can use to spice up an otherwise boring presentation.

You also have the options to loop the animation and set a delay so that your elements appear animated at different times.

To preview these effects on the current page, press F2 or go to Page in the menu bar and select Preview.

This will open your default web browser and play the flash presentation. To see the whole presentation (and not just the current page which is what you get with Preview), you’ll have to save your work and use the Export feature (Ctrl + E).

After this, you’ll have a Powerbullet folder in the location you chose (in my case, my Dropbox) and several files you can now share with others: a Windows executable, the flash file (in SWF format) and the .htm file.

You can copy the flash and .htm files to your FTP server, like Tinkernut does for a quick introductory banner that users can click on and get to a website (if you previously set a hyperlink, which is easily achieved by going to Insert > Page link).

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Mrdavidhsmith

December 8, 2010 at 11:51 am

I have used iSpring free version, a Powerpoint plug in which converts presentations to swf slideshows with one click. It's not perfect- it skips every second animation within each slide*, and every animation on the free version has an iSpring logo in the corner- but I like using existing and transferable skills in PowerPoint, rather than new skills in a new program like Powerbullet. Powerbullet would be great for splash pages though.* I don't have the most recent download, that bug may have been fixed.

I have used iSpring free version, a Powerpoint plug in which converts presentations to swf slideshows with one click. It's not perfect- it skips every second animation within each slide*, and every animation on the free version has an iSpring logo in the corner- but I like using existing and transferable skills in PowerPoint, rather than new skills in a new program like Powerbullet. Powerbullet would be great for splash pages though.
* I don't have the most recent download, that bug may have been fixed.